Remarks from the 2007 Food and Family Farm Presidential Summit PDF Print E-mail
Written by Richard R. Oswald   
Sunday, 11 November 2007
The Downtown Marriott was the scene for a candidate forum held by National and Iowa Farmers Union in Des Moines on Saturday, the tenth of November. There were some notable quotes among the Presidential candidates. Those candidates who came to speak to the crowd were Dodd, Obama, Edwards, Biden, and Clinton. Also appearing was Senator Chuck Grassley and Congressman Leonard Boswell, both of Iowa.

  Here are some quotes from the day, in order of appearance (read more):

 

Obama; “Callers to Washington from rural America can’t get through because a lobbyist is already on the line”.  “Among the things I will fight to do on my first days in office” are “Support the packer ban, not the US Department of Agribusiness” and “stop EQIP funding for CAFOs”. “The CAFO issue is about principle, not politics”. “I will take action on a rural agenda in my first 100 days in office”.

Dodd; “A farmer should be Secretary of Agriculture”. “It is the responsibility of the President to help rural people meet challenges”. “I will support an Attorney General who will enforce anti-trust laws”. “Rural America is important to every person in America.” “I joined the Peace Corps because an American President asked me to.” “I am the only candidate to get mail both from AARP and a diaper service.” 

Edwards; “It is strong and patriotic to grow your food locally”. “I will do everything in my power to install a packer ban” “I will call for a moratorium on CAFO expansion and an outright ban on new construction”.  “Taxpayers should not subsidize those who are driving family farms out of business”. “Huge corporations have corrupted the government” because “what they care about is the almighty dollar”. “We cannot replace a corporate Republican President with a corporate Democratic President”. "I will give America hope” but “will give the people who try to force you out of farming, Hell.”

Biden; “I am one of the 800 candidates for President”. “Delaware has a $3 billion agriculture industry” that is “the single largest industry in Delaware.” “Farmers, I admire you, but I don’t know why in God’s name you do it”. With war and saber rattling, we have “placed $20 billion into the pocket of Ahmadinejad” of Iran. “25% to 30% of the cost of oil is risk” assumed by those in the oil markets.  War talk out of Washington “places farms in jeopardy” through higher oil prices.  “Everywhere I go in Iowa I say ‘ethanol’. They say 'Yay!' Then I say E85 pumps, and they say ‘Where?’”

Clinton; “I will veto the failed policies of George Bush”. “People are leaving Rural America at a greater rate than ever before” “Clearing brush on his Texas ranch is about the only rural agenda Bush has”. "I will support the triple entry rule”. “Rural banks have been gobbled up by bigger banks”. “Rural families feel like they’re standing on a trap door, one pink slip or illness away from losing everything”.

Also notable was Senator Chuck Grassley; “an old axiom says that we are only 9 meals away from Revolution”. “Packers own livestock so that when prices are high they can kill their own, and when prices are low they can buy from the farmer”. 25 years ago, “giving accelerated depreciation to special purpose livestock buildings helped accelerate livestock concentration”.

Leonard Boswell; “Don’t give up”.

 
Trackback(0)
Comments (0)add
Write comment

busy
 
< Prev   Next >

In the news

The following article appeared on the online site for Manufacturing & Technology News on November 17, 2008 and was written by Paul Craig Roberts, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. 

By most accounts the U.S. economy is in serious trouble. Robert Reich, an adviser to President-elect Obama, calls it a "mini-depression," but that designation might be optimistic. Russian economist Mikhail Khazin says that the "U.S. will soon face a second Great Depression." It is possible that even Khazin is optimistic.

I cannot predict the future. However, I can explain what the problems are, how they differ from past times of troubles and why traditional remedies, such as the public works programs that Reich proposes, are unlikely to succeed in reviving the U.S. economy.

Read more...